New mosquito-borne virus Zika spreading in Caribbean

Haiti confirmed presence of Zika virus

Brazil studying whether new mosquito-borne virus linked to small brains in newborns?

Centers for Disease issues travel alert for travelers

This 2006 photo provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows a female Aedes aegypti mosquito in the process of acquiring a blood meal from a human host.
Photographer: James GathanyAP

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is warning pregnant woman and others to be aware when traveling to countries where a new mosquito-borne illness — possibly linked to babies born with small, undeveloped brains in Brazil — has appeared.

The travel alert came the same day that Haitian health officials confirmed that the Zika virus was present in the country.

“We’ve always said that once we are certain of something, we will say it,” Minister Florence Guillaume said at a press conference Friday. “We have scientifically confirmed that the illness... everyone calls Zika is in Haiti.”

Hours later, the CDC in Atlanta, which was considering whether to warn pregnant women against travel to countries in the region where Zika is present, issued its travel alert. The countries it warned about are: Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador, French Guiana, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Martinique, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Suriname and Venezuela, as well as the commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Caribbean health officials say the virus is also present in Guyana.

“Pregnant women who must travel to one of these areas should strictly follow steps to avoid mosquito bites during the trip,” the CDC said.

For weeks, Haitians had suspected that the rare virus, which has been quickly spreading through South America, Central America and the Caribbean, was present in Haiti. But health officials had refused to confirm their suspicions that the flu-like symptoms of fever, red eyes and rashes were Zika.

Spread by the same Aedes aegypti mosquito that spreads dengue fever and chikungunya, Zika was first discovered in Uganda in 1947. But its spread from Africa and Southeast Asia had been rare, even though it usually follows an outbreak of chikungunya fever, which threatened the social and economic development of small island economies after it was first detected in the Western Hemisphere in December 2013.

Recalling chikungunya’s quick spread in the Caribbean last year, Dr. James Hospedales said he expects Zika to also quickly spread to other Caribbean islands. Hospedales is the executive director of the Trinidad-based Caribbean Public Health Agency, which confirmed Zika’s presence in Haiti after receiving blood samples from the health ministry.

In Brazil, health officials are studying whether the virus is linked to microcephaly, a condition in which a children are born with damaged, smaller than normal brains. The number of cases have jumped dramatically since 2014, and the CDC says more research is needed to determine the relationship, but pregnant women should take precautions.